:GJS1M 67dcbdbce4a0b67c4b48e86a6ae29205a95e4b83024a9d947213d1231800e8d9
:48 3ad6145185fc7c6037c89c1cfe627d44
:0 1277199191
it makes programming less annoying
:GJS1M 67dcbdbce4a0b67c4b48e86a6ae29205a95e4b83024a9d947213d1231800e8d9
:132 425f4676561c4798aef266c951dbc761
:1277199219 1277219607 >>1
This passes my implementation of JSB-1. Which leads me to believe that the author's MD5 really is broken.
:GJS1M 67dcbdbce4a0b67c4b48e86a6ae29205a95e4b83024a9d947213d1231800e8d9
:201 3ac7e6fb9571ff45968135fa51d6fb94
:1277199219 1277222171 >>5 >>1 here. Your MAC should be 75ae774c0118838cadc2cb32c4b660fc. I didn't see anything wrong with the author's samples except for some sloppy newline handling in the beginning.
:GJS1M 67dcbdbce4a0b67c4b48e86a6ae29205a95e4b83024a9d947213d1231800e8d9
:53 0e095e907aae5de4d0a9ddc2c9aef9a2
:1277199219 1277222658 >>9,10
Can either of you read?
:GJS1M 67dcbdbce4a0b67c4b48e86a6ae29205a95e4b83024a9d947213d1231800e8d9
:145 cb0b0314578412025daf80ef35c54c7a
:1277199219 1277227058 >>8
I found the bug in my code. A stupid one, but that's what you get when you write bit handling code in Haskell at 4 AM.